How the FBI Responded to Elon Musk's Email Isn't Shocking. The Lib Media...
Elon Musk's Latest Directive for Federal Workers Is Straight Out of Office Space
Possibly The Dumbest Example Of Waste DOGE Has Discovered (So Far)
Maine Governor Janet Mills: Leader Of The New Confederate States of America
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 256: What the New Testament Says About Pride...
Dem Gov. Under Fire for Paying Cabinet Members Sweet Bonuses in 2024
It’s Over: Joy Reid’s MSNBC Show Canceled
Trump Seeks to Sell the Nancy Pelosi Federal Building in San Francisco
JD Vance Dominates CPAC Straw Poll as Leading Contender for 2028 GOP Nomination
Tony Evers Aims to Change 'Mother' to 'Inseminated Person'
Israel Does Not Have the Kishkes* to Win
USAID is Funding Political Persecution in Ukraine
Congress Must Cancel Foreign Derived Intangible Income Tax Break
Trump Taps Kash Patel as the New Acting Director of the ATF
Trump Reveals the One Thing That Made Him Run Again
Tipsheet

Two New Polls of a Critical Swing State Show the Same Candidate Leading...

AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

I don't think it's overstating matters to say that if Joe Biden loses Pennsylvania in November, his road to victory within the electoral college will be narrow-to-nonexistent.  Donald Trump could lose the Keystone State and cobble together a few plausible paths 270, though claiming that prize could guarantee his victory.  In 2016, Trump carried Pennsylvania over Hillary Clinton by less than one percentage point.  Four years later, Biden eked out a close win by just over one percentage point.  Another very close contest is expected.  As Rebecca covered earlier in the week, a fresh survey of this crucial battleground -- commissioned by the left-leaning advocacy group AARP -- found the 45th president leading the 46th president in their looming rematch by four points, head-to-head.  Within a wider field, the margin expands slightly to five points:

Advertisement

Trump is up 10 points among independents here.  The survey also shows the GOP ahead slightly in the state's 'generic ballot,' though incumbent Senator Bob Casey, a Biden rubber-stamp Democrat, maintains a modest lead over Republican challenger Dave McCormick.  This poll's top-line results are strikingly similar to another Keystone State data set published this week by Muhlenberg College:

Trump has a three point lead against Biden in a straight-up matchup, but when Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is added to the mix as an independent, the two major party nominees are tied.  In the AARP poll, RFK wasn't included.  This suggests that the prominent third-party candidate's presence may benefit Biden in Pennsylvania, if he can get on the ballot.  In other states (see below, for instance), RFK appears to boost Trump.  To hammer away at the electoral dynamic I can't stop writing and talking about, this latter survey found the former president ahead by two points among those who say they are "definitely voting" this year.  Among those who are "not likely" to vote, Trump's lead is 11 points.  All the numbers show that there's a sizable reservoir of would-be Trump supporters who are either unreliable voters, or who aren't yet registered to vote.  How many of them do or do not participate in the election could be the difference between a Trump win and a bigger Trump win -- or they could be the deciding factor between a Trump win and a Trump loss.  

Advertisement

The Democrats and the Biden campaign are deadly serious about their ballot-chasing turnout operation.  Republicans and Team Trump seem to be lagging considerably behind in this imperative-to-decisive realm.  Meanwhile, Quinnipiac has released a new poll in the swing state of Wisconsin, which looks like good news for the incumbent:

This survey shows a six-point Biden lead collapsing down to a neck-and-neck virtual tie when RFK and others are included on the ballot, indicating that unlike in Pennsylvania, Trump may be rooting for the independent candidate with a famous last name to gain ballot access.  Then again, I take all Quinnipiac numbers with a chunk of salt because that pollster has been, to be quite frank, horrendous for multiple cycles -- especially, but not exclusively, at the state level.  To wit:

Advertisement

Yikes.  I'll leave you with a reality that the Trump campaign also needs to take seriously, as expounded upon by Marc Thiessen:


Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement